6263b5ea711da Childhood Notes

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CHILDHOOD

By Markus Natten
Introduction

In the poem Childhood, the poet ponders deeply over the question of his lost
childhood. He recalls a number of stages when his thoughts and perceptions about
the world and people changed. He tries to identify that one particular stage or time
when he lost his childhood and stepped into adulthood. He feels a sense of nostalgia
for the lost childhood and finally settles down with an idea that his childhood has gone
to some forgotten place and that place could only be found in an infant’s innocent
face.

Summary

The speaker pondered deeply upon the spiritual questions of life and ultimately
realized the fact that his childhood days were finally gone down into the past of
eternity for good and would never return. Childhood would now only remain in his
memories. He wandered if the end of childhood was the day he ceased to be eleven
years old. The time when he realized that heaven and hell are not real places because
they could not be located in geography and never could be. Where did his childhood
go? Was it the time he realized that adults were not all they seemed to be? They talked
of love and they preached of love, but did not act so lovingly nor practiced what they
preached. Was that the day. Where did his childhood go? Was it when he found out
that his mind was really his? To use it whichever way he chose? To produce thoughts
that was not those of other people but his and his alone. Was that the day? Where did
his childhood go? It went to some forgotten place that is hidden in a baby’s face. That
was all that he knew and that was all that he remembered.
In the poem ‘Childhood’, the poet is trying to realise the age when he lost his
childhood, when he became mature enough to understand the worldly things. So he
keeps saying, “When did my childhood go?” He finally realizes that his childhood is
gone to “some forgotten place”, “that is hidden in an infant’s face.”

Detailed Explanation

Stanza 1
Childhood has for centuries been considered by poets as a blissful period of one’s life.
In this poem, the poet exhibits his curiosity to know, when an individual ceases to be
a child. The process of growing up from a child to an adolescent and an adult is an
inevitable one. There is no line of demarcation between the various stages of life. The
poet begins the poem by putting forth this question to himself. He wonders when did
his childhood leave him and where could it be found now? He wonders if it was the
day he ceased to be eleven, or was it the time he realized that Heaven and Hell could
not be located on the maps he was familiar with. As he matures he realizes that they
do not exist in this world. They are only imaginary places.

Stanza 2
In the second stanza, the poet reiterates the same question and wonders if it is the
day when a child develops a new perception with which he is able to see through the
hypocrisy of the adults. They talk of love and preached of love but in actuality they are
double faced. Was that the day?
Stanza 3
In the third stanza, the poet pondering over the same question wonders if it was the
day when his perso nality acquired certain individuality. When he realized that his
mind was his own and he was capable of producing thoughts that were his own,
devoid of any form of bias or influence. Now he is conscious of his own separate
identity and feels himself different from others.

Stanza 4
The poet concludes the poem by expressing his regret at the loss of his childhood
which was a beautiful period of his life. He comes to the conclusion that it has gone to
some forgotten place. The recollection of it has faded away with the passage of time.
Perhaps it has gone to the innocent face of a child. Here the poet creates a lovely
image of an infant’s face. He conveys the idea that innocence of the childhood remains
only as long as one is infant. There is a tinge of optimism in this thought. At least
innocence and purity of mind prevails in some form or the other on this earth.

When did my childhood go?


Was it the day I ceased to be eleven.
Was it the time I realised that Hell and Heaven,
Could not be found in Geography,
And therefore could not be,
Was that the day!
Q1. When does poet realise that his childhood has gone?
Ans. Poet realises at the age of eleven.
Q2. Why is the age of eleven so important for the poet?
Ans. Because at the age of eleven, he can differentiate between fact and fiction.
Q3. What is the quality acquired by the poet at this stage of his life?
Ans. The poet has become rational at this stage.
Q4. When did the poet know that ‘hell’ and ‘heaven’ are imaginary concepts?
Ans. When he could not locate these places in geography books.
Q5. Why is the poet worried?
Ans. The poet is worried because he has lost his purity of thoughts and innocence.
Q6. Where has the poet’s childhood gone?
Ans. His childhood has gone to some forgotten place.
Q7. What is a child’s perception of an adult?
Ans. As the childhood goes, the child can differentiate between fact and fiction.

When did my childhood go?


Was it the time I realised that adults were not
All they seemed to be,
They talked of love and preached of love,
But did not act so lovingly,
Was that the day!
Q1. Why does the poet not talk great of grown up people?
Ans. Poet feels that grown up people do not act on what they preach.
Q2.Why is the poet confused?
Ans. Poet cannot understand whether he is a child or an adult.
Q3.How does the poet find the people in this world?
Ans. Poet finds the people as hypocrites.
Q4.Choose word from the passage which means ‘sermonized’.
Ans. Preached
When did my childhood go?
Was it when I found my mind was really mine,
To use whichever way I choose,
Producing thoughts that were not those of other people
But my own and mine alone
Was that the day!
Q1. Explain ‘My mind was really mine’?
Ans. It means that poet was completely in control of himself.
Q2. ‘Producing thoughts that were not these of other people’s means:
Ans. The poet has gained confidence to express his views independently.
Q3. Which stage of life has been under consideration above?
Ans. Poet is passing through adulthood.
Q4. What thoughts of the poet are revealed in these lines?
Ans. His individuality is expressed here.

Where did my childhood go?


It went to some forgotten place,
That is hidden in an infant’s face,
That’s all I know.
Q1. Why is the poet eager to know the lost place of his childhood?
Ans. (i) The poet cherishes childhood the most.
(ii) The poet once again wishes to lead the innocent life of a child.
(iii) The poet is eager to know where his childhood is hidden.
Q2.Where is poet able to find his lost childhood?
Ans. In the innocent face of the infant.
Q3. Choose a word from the passage which is synonymous to ‘concealed.
Ans. Hidden
Q4. What is the rhyming scheme of the above lines?
Ans. a b b a.

Short Answer Type Questions

Q1. How does the poem expose man and presents him in true colours?
Ans. Childhood symbolizes innocence, purity, softness and love. As a child grows,
these qualities start receding. Man becomes impure, cunning, shrewd and hypocrite.
Grown-ups become blatant liars. They talk of love but practice hatred. They preach
brotherhood of mankind but perpetuate hatred and killing. Simplicity and honesty
evaporate into thin air, the moment man crosses the threshold of innocent childhood.

Q2. What is the poet’s feeling towards the childhood?


Ans. The poet regards childhood as a period of heavenly innocence. A child sincerely
feels that there is god above. He is free from all earthly evils. He believes that there is
really a Heaven and a Hell. He is truly religious in his soul. A child knows no
hypocrisy. He always means what he says. There is no difference between his thoughts
and actions. A child is free from any sense of ego. He does not think himself to be
different from or superior to others. In short, childhood is a state of heavenly
innocence and purity of heart.
Q3. What according to the poem, is involved in the process of growing up?
Ans. As a person grows up, he becomes a rationalist, an egoist and a hypocrite. He
accepts nothing that is not logical. He loses faith in God. He does not believe in Hell or
Heaven. He becomes very conscious of his self. He wants to follow his own desires and
ideas. He becomes an egoist. He talks of love and preaches of love, but is not so loving
in his actions. In short, he loses all his innocence of his childhood.
Q4. How does the poet describe the process of being grown up?
Ans. The process of being grown up develops the critical thinking and analytical point
of view in the person. It makes the person rationalized and abled to take his decision
by virtue of his seat of reasoning.

Q5. How does the poet repent on his loss of childhood?


Ans. He expresses concern over his childhood’s disappearance. Childhood cannot be
regained. It keeps our life aloof from the world of hypocrisy, bitter reality and
materialism.

Q6. The poet has asked two questions one is about the time and other is about
the place. Why has he used these questions?
Ans. He has used these two questions to interpret the time and place of way of going
his childhood away. “When” points out the process of being rational at a particular
time and “where” states the place where the
innocent world of childhood resides.

Q7. What does the Hell and heaven stand for?


Ans. It stands for the world of imagination that fascinates only small children. These are nothing but the
product of our imaginative mind that helps the person to escape from reality.

Q8. What contrast did he find in adult’s behaviour?


Ans. They talked of human values but did not practise in their day to day life.

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